On October 9, 1974, the Washington Capitals took the ice for the first time, dropping a 6-3 decision to the New York Rangers. It took 3,700 more regular season and playoff games, but 15,947 days later, the Washington Capitals may now add “Stanley Cup Champion” to their history.
The Capitals vanquished the Vegas Golden Knights in Game 5
of their Stanley Cup final series with a thrilling come-from-behind 4-3 win at
T-Mobile Arena, ending the fifth-longest Stanley Cup drought in the NHL. With the win, the Caps become the 19th
franchise in the current NHL to hoist the Cup.
First Period
The period did not lack for intensity, but it was the sort
of intensity one sees in the feeling-out early rounds of a prize fight at
Caesar’s Palace. The Caps enjoyed the
period’s only power play, but could not convert. Alex Ovechkin had a chance off a feed from
John Carlson, but his one-timer from the left wing circle clanged off the far
post past goalie Marc-Andre Fleury, and out.
It would be perhaps the best chance either team had in the opening 20
minutes.
Odd numbers… The Caps had a 15-12 advantage in shot attempts
and a 9-7 edge in shots on goal.
Ovechkin led with four shot attempts, while three Caps had three apiece
(Nicklas Backstrom, John Carlson, and Christian Djoos). Vegas had a whopping 18-10 edge in credited
hits. Dmitry Orlov led all players with 9:13
in ice time in the period.
Second Period
The Caps got a gift early, Shea Theodore taking a tripping
penalty to put Washington on their second power play. The Caps did not convert, and it looked as if
it might come back to haunt them when Vegas was awarded a power play a minute
after the Caps’ man advantage expired.
Vegas could not convert on their opportunity, leaving it to an even
strength situation in which the game’s first goal would be scored.
Off a Deryk Engelland missed shot, the Caps quickly
transitioned to offense, Tom Wilson feeding Jakub Vrana on a breakaway. Vrana charged in and snapped a shot high over
Fleury’s glove and into the top corner to make it a 1-0 game 6:24 into the
period.
Vegas tied the game three minutes later when Jonathan
Marchessault redirected an attempt by Reilly Smith past Braden Holtby, and the
Golden Knights were back in it 9:40 into the period.
The tie lasted 34 seconds.
With Brayden McNabb in the box on a tripping call, Nicklas Backstrom had
the puck in the dispatch office along the right wall. Picking a lane that perhaps only he could
see, he threaded a pass all the way through to Alex Ovechkin in the left wing
circle. Ovechkin’s one-timer flew behind
Fleury into the back of the net, and the Caps had a 2-1 lead at the 10:14 mark.
Vegas crawled back into it a second time, though. David Perron redirected a Tomas Tatar effort
into the net as he was tumbling into it himself. The Caps challenged the goal, but the on-ice
call stood, apparently a case of Christian Djoos being the force behind Perron’s
tumble. The game was tied, 2-2, 12:56
into the frame.
Reilly Smith gave Vegas their first lead of the game late in
the period. With Ovechkin in the box for
tripping, Vegas had the Caps running around in their own end, and eventually
the puck pinballed out to Smith, who had an open net into which he slid the
puck. With 28.2 seconds left in the
period, Vegas was up, 3-2.
Third Period
The teams got off to an ornery start to the third period,
both clubs drawing two sets of coincidental minor penalties for roughing –
Brooks Orpik and Jay Beagle for the Caps, Tomas Tatar and Alex Tuch for Vegas.
Vegas took another penalty in the sixth minute, Tatar going
off for hooking. The Knights weathered
the storm, though, in what appeared to be the Caps’ best remaining chance to
make a new game of it.
The Caps did have more left in them, though. Mid-way through the period, Devante
Smith-Pelly cut across the slot and settled a shot from the left point off the
stick of Brooks Orpik with his skate. As
he was being hooked/tripped by Colin Miller, he managed to get off a shot as he
was falling, beating Fleury on the glove side to make it a 3-3 game 9:52 into
the period.
And they had one more left in them. The Caps worked the puck in deep, and Vegas
defenseman Luc Sbisa went to try and collect it behind the Knights’ net. He lost the puck in his skates, though, and
it slid to Andre Burakovsky, who fed it in front to Brett Connolly steaming
down the middle. Connolly’s shot was
stopped by Fleury, but the puck trickled through his pads. Lars Eller jumped in, dug it out from between
Fleury’s ankles, and snapped it into the back of the net from the top of the paint,
and the Caps had the lead once more at 4-3, 12:23 into the period.
The clock could not move fast enough for the Caps after
that, but Braden Holtby was the wall that would not yield, and the Caps skated
off the last 7:37 to claim the Stanley Cup.
Other stuff…
-- Ovechkin’s goal was his 15th of the
postseason, tying the high for a single postseason since 2005-2006 (Sidney
Crosby in 2009). It set a new franchise
record for goals in a postseason (John Druce: 14 in 1990).
-- Vrana’s goal broke a 12-game streak without one, dating
back to Game 5 against the Penguins.
That one was a game-winner for the Caps.
-- Lars Eller got the game-winning goal, his third of the
postseason, all of them on the road. He
is the first player from Denmark to win a Stanley Cup.
-- The amazing thing on the score sheet… eleven different
skaters recorded a point. One point
apiece.
-- Ovechkin had 11 shot attempts, Lars Eller had five shots
on goal (tied with Ovechkin), Tom Wilson had six credited hits, Michal Kempny
had three blocked shots, Nicklas Backstrom won 14 of 22 draws (63.6 percent).
-- Evgeny Kuznetsov had an assist. He finished with points in 19 of the 24 games
of the postseason.
-- The win was the Caps’ tenth on the road in this
postseason, tying an NHL record for one postseason.
-- John Carlson had an assist, giving him points in 15 of
the 24 games from the blue line. He led
all playoff defensemen with 19 points and tied for the postseason lead in goals
among defensemen (Dustin Byfuglien).
-- Devante Smith-Pelly’s goal was his seventh of the
postseason, a career best and fourth highest on the team behind Ovechkin,
Kuznetsov, and T.J. Oshie.
-- Braden Holtby stopped 28 of 31 shots for the win. In the last 22 games he played, all starts
after sitting for Philipp Grubauer to start the first two games of the
postseason, he was 16-6, 2.17, .922.
-- The Caps came into this game as the only team in the postseason to have won two games when trailing after two periods. Now, it's three.
-- The Caps came into this game as the only team in the postseason to have won two games when trailing after two periods. Now, it's three.
In the end…
It all boils down to this in the end… Washington Capitals,
Stanley Cup Champions.
Wooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteCongrats Peerless. You deserve it!
ReplyDeleteFinally, after all these years... One stat everyone is overlooking: Caps weren't shut out in any of the post season games this year! Not once!
ReplyDelete